Litcius/Paper detail

Inkjet-Printed Electronics on Paper for RF Identification (RFID) and Sensing

Sangkil Kim

2020Electronics58 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The newly developed research area of inkjet-printed radio frequency (RF) electronics on cellulose-based and synthetic paper substrates is introduced in this paper. This review paper presents the electrical properties of the paper substrates, the printed silver nanoparticle-based thin films, the dielectric layers, and the catalyst-based metallization process. Numerous inkjet-printed microwave passive/ative systems on paper, such as a printed radio frequency identification (RFID) tag, an RFID-enabled sensor utilizing carbon nanotubes (CNTs), a substrate-integrated waveguide (SIW), fully printed vias, an autonomous solar-powered beacon oscillator (active antenna), and artificial magnetic conductors (AMC), are discussed. The reported technology could potentially act as the foundation for true “green” low-cost scalable wireless topologies for autonomous Internet-of-Things (IoT), bio-monitoring, and “smart skin” applications.

Topics & Concepts

Radio-frequency identificationConductive inkElectronicsPrinted electronicsPrinted circuit boardAntenna (radio)Substrate (aquarium)MicrowaveMaterials scienceRadio frequencyElectrical engineeringElectrical conductorWirelessElectronic engineeringNanotechnologyComputer scienceEngineeringTelecommunicationsLayer (electronics)OceanographyComputer securitySheet resistanceGeologyAdvanced Sensor and Energy Harvesting MaterialsNanomaterials and Printing TechnologiesRFID technology advancements